Eric Goplerud PowerPoint - National Association of Psychiatric

Screening for High Risk and Dependent
Alcohol Use among Psychiatric
Inpatients
The Joint Commission’s SUB-1
Eric Goplerud, Ph.D.
Senior Vice President
Director, Substance Abuse, Mental Health and
Criminal Justice Studies
[email protected]
301-634-9525
Screening for Alcohol Use among Psychiatric
Inpatients
• Screening refers to a tool – usually a brief
questionnaire – that finds subjects who have or
are at high risk for a disorder in a population of
interest.
• Screening does not establish a diagnosis.
Instead, it identifies people at risk for or likely to
have a disorder
• The Joint Commission SUB-1 measure specifies
a “validated” screening instrument
2
HOW TO HELP PATIENTS: A CLINICAL APPROACH
STEP 1:
Ask About
Alcohol Use
Prescreen: Do you
sometimes drink beer,
wine, or other alcoholic
beverages?
If NO… the screening is
complete.
If YES…
Pre-Screen: The NIAAA – Recommended
Single Question Alcohol Screener
None
MEN:
WOMEN:
1 or more
How many times in the past year have you had 5 or more
drinks in a day?
How many times in the past year have you had 4 or more
drinks in a day?
This question was sensitive (87.9%) but less specific (66.8%) for
the detection of a current alcohol use disorder.
Smith PC, Schmidt SM, Allensworth-Davies D, Saitz R. Primary care validation of a single-question alcohol screening test. J
Gen Intern Med. 2009;24:783–788.
Supplemented by two-item screener: (1) recurrent drinking in
hazardous situations and (2) drinking more than intended. If
either answered yes, the sensitivity of current SUD varies from
77% to 95% and the specificity from 62% to 86%.
» Vinson DC, Kruse RL, Seale JP. Simplifying alcohol assessment: two questions to
identify alcohol use disorders. Alcohol Clin Exp Res. 2007;31:1392–1398.
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Why We Recommend the AUDIT
 Valid
 Reliable
 Brief
 Public domain
 Free
 Multiple languages
 Widely used in the U.S. and Canada
 Identifies unhealthy and dependent drinking patterns
 Results guide treatment
 Monitors change in use
 Fits with other screeners (e.g. PHQ-9 for depression)
 Multiple ways to administer (verbally, in person or
over the phone, on paper or online)
HOW TO HELP PATIENTS: A CLINICAL APPROACH
STEP 1:
Is the Screening Positive?
Positive Screening =
 1 or more heavy
drinking days
HOW TO HELP PATIENTS: A CLINICAL APPROACH
If YES…
Ask the screening question about
heavy drinking days:
How many times in the past year
have you had…
5 or more drinks in a day? (for men)
4 or more drinks in a day? (for women)
?
How much is a drink?
This is one unit of alcohol…
…and each of these is more than one unit
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HOW TO HELP PATIENTS: A CLINICAL APPROACH
STEP 1: Is the Screening Positive?
If NO then…
 Advise staying within these limits:
Maximum Drinking Limits
For healthy men up to age 65—
• no more than 4 drinks in a day AND
• no more than 14 drinks in a week
For healthy women (and healthy men
over age 65)—
• no more than 3 drinks in a day AND
• no more than 7 drinks in a week
HOW TO HELP PATIENTS: A CLINICAL APPROACH
STEP 1: Is the Screening Positive?
If YES then…
 Your patient is an at-risk drinker.
For a more complete picture of the
drinking pattern, determine the
weekly average:
• On average, how many days a
week do you have an alcoholic drink?
x
• On a typical drinking day, how
many drinks do you have?
Weekly Average
Using the AUDIT –C: Consumption Questions
Questions
0
1
2
3
4
2-3
times
per
week
4 or
more
times
per
week
7 to 9
10 +
Weekly
Daily or
almost
daily
1. How often do
you have a drink
containing
alcohol?
Never
Monthly
or less
2-4
times
per
month
2. How many
drinks containing
alcohol do you
have on a typical
day of drinking?
1 or 2
3 or 4
5 or 6
Never
Less
than
monthly
3. How often do
you have 5 (for
men under age
65)/4 (for women
and men over age
65) or more drinks
on one occasion?
Monthly
AUDIT-C Score (add items 1-3)
Positive screen = 4 for men/3 for women and men over age 65. If
positive, ask the next 7 questions to administer the full AUDIT.
Score
AUDIT-C Intervention guide
From Group Health of Puget
Sound
AUDIT-PC: Consumption, Problems –
predicts hospital withdrawal risk
Scoring system
Questions
0
How often do you have a drink containing
alcohol?
How many units of alcohol do you drink
on a typical day when you are drinking?
How often during the last year have you
found that you were not able to stop
drinking once you had started?
How often during the last year have you
failed to do what was normally expected
from you because of your drinking?
Has a relative or friend, doctor or other
health worker been concerned about your
drinking or suggested that you cut down?
1
2
3
4
Never
Monthly
or less
2-4
times
per
month
2-3
times
per
week
4+ times
per
week
1 -2
3-4
5-6
7-9
10+
Never
Less
than
monthly
Weekly
Daily or
almost
daily
Never
Less
than
monthly
Weekly
Daily or
almost
daily
No
Monthly
Monthly
Yes, but
not in
the last
year
Your
score
Yes,
during
the last
year
Scoring:
A total of 5+ indicates increasing or higher risk drinking.
An overall total score of 5 or above is AUDIT-PC positive.
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Remaining AUDIT Questions
Scoring system
Questions
How often have you had 6 or more units if
female, or 8 or more if male, on a single
occasion in the last year?
How often during the last year have you
needed an alcoholic drink in the morning to
get yourself going after a heavy drinking
session?
How often during the last year have you
had a feeling of guilt or remorse after
drinking?
How often during the last year have you
been unable to remember what happened
the night before because you had been
drinking?
Have you or somebody else been injured
as a result of your drinking?
0
1
2
3
4
Never
Less than
monthly
Monthly
Weekly
Daily or
almost
daily
Never
Less than
monthly
Weekly
Daily or
almost
daily
Never
Less than
monthly
Weekly
Daily or
almost
daily
Never
Less than
monthly
Weekly
Daily or
almost
daily
No
Monthly
Monthly
Monthly
Yes, but
not in
the last
year
Yes,
during
the last
year
Your
score
Other Screening Instruments
Adolescents: CRAFFT
Geriatric – MAST-G
CAGE?
Alcohol and other Drugs – ASSIST
Behavioral health and AUDs – GAIN-SS
SIP-A
ASI – Alcohol Subscale
Adolescent Screener: CRAFFT
Arch Pediatr Adolesc Med. 2002;156(6):607-614. doi:10.1001/archpedi.156.6.607
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The ASSIST - Alcohol, Smoking and Substance
Involvement Screening Test (WHO)
http://www.who.int/substance_abuse/activities/assist/en/
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Global Appraisal of Individual Needs Short
Screener (GAIN-SS) -- Substance Use Scale
When was the last time that…
you used alcohol or other drugs weekly or more often?
you spent a lot of time either getting alcohol or other drugs, using alcohol
or other drugs, or recovering from the effects of alcohol or other drugs
(e.g., feeling sick)?
you kept using alcohol or other drugs even though it was causing social
problems, leading to fights, or getting you into trouble with other people?
your use of alcohol or other drugs caused you to give up or reduce your
involvement in activities at work, school, home, or social events?
you had withdrawal problems like shaky hands, throwing up, having
trouble sitting still or sleeping, or used to stop being sick?
Dennis, M. L., Chan, Y. F., & Funk, R. R. (2006). Development and validation of the GAIN
Short Screener (GSS) for internalizing, externalizing and substance use disorders and
crime/violence problems among adolescents and adults. The American Journal on
Addictions, 15(s1), s80-s91.
SIP-A Short Index of Problems - Alcohol
I have been unhappy because
of..
I had money problems because
of
I have not eaten properly
because of
My physical appearance was
harmed by
I failed to do what was expected
My family was hurt by
because of
I felt guilty because of
My friendships have been
damaged by
I have taken foolish risks
because of
Alcohol has gotten in the way of
my growth
I have done impulsive things
when
Alcohol damaged my social life
My physical health was harmed
by
I spent too much time because of
I have had an accident while.
Feinn R, Tennen H, Kranzler HR. Psychometric properties of the Short Index of Problems as a
measure of recent alcohol-related problems. Alcsm Clin Exp Res. 2003;27:1436–41Alterman
AI, Cacciola JS, Ivey MA, Habing B, Lynch KG. Reliability and validity of the alcohol SIP and a
newly constructed drug Short Index of Problems. J Stud Alcohol Drugs. 2009;70:304–7 20
Addiction Severity Index – 6; Alcohol Scale
Drank more/longer than intended
Time spent drinking
Impaired control (stop/cut down)
Use despite interpersonal
problems
Hazardous use
Failure to fulfill role
obligations
Withdrawal
Activities given up
Tolerance
Legal problems
Use despite physical/psychological problems
Cacciola, J. S., Alterman, A. I., Habing, B., & McLellan,
A. T. (2011). Recent status scores for version 6 of the
Addiction Severity Index (ASI‐6). Addiction, 106(9), 21
1588-1602.
CAGE – not recommended,
insensitive to risky use
(1) “Have you ever felt you ought to Cut down on your
drinking?”;
(2) “Have people Annoyed you by criticizing your
drinking?”;
(3) “Have you ever felt bad or Guilty about your drinking?”;
and
(4) “Have you ever had a drink in the morning to steady
your nerves or get rid of a hangover (Eye opener)?”.
One positive response should raise the possibility of alcohol-related
problems, but most researchers have used two or more positive responses.
A pooled analysis of the CAGE in screening for alcohol abuse and
dependence found a sensitivity of 0.87 in inpatients. Binge drinking and high
risk use are often not captured by the CAGE.
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SUB-1 Training
www.SBIRTmentor.com
SBIRTmentor
• Self-directed and convenient:
complete at work, home or on the road
with unlimited 24/7 availability
• Easy to use: immediate access with
a few mouse clicks
• Screening and brief intervention
practice with simulated patients in
hospital situations
• Immediate feedback from
standardized patients and skill
acquisition scores
3 CMEs, continuing nurse education
and counselor, social work,
psychology CEUs
• For more information, 303.369.0039 x245 or
[email protected]
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• To access visit www.SBIRTmentor.com
Has enough time passed for SBI?
“Suitable methods of identification and
readily learned brief intervention techniques
with good evidence of efficacy are now
available. The committee recommends…
broad deployment of identification and brief
intervention.”
1990 (23 years ago!)
(IOM, Broadening the Base of Treatment for Alcohol Problems, 1990, p. 8)
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Eric Goplerud Senior Vice President
Substance Abuse, Mental Health and Criminal Justice Studies
NORC at the University of Chicago
4350 East West Highway 8th Floor, Bethesda, MD 20814
[email protected] | office 301-634-9525 | mobile 301-852-8427
Thank You!